I'd be for maybe exempting suppressors from the $200 tax stamp. CCPs should not be easier to obtain; if anything, they should be more difficult require more training. As far as national CCP reciprocity, that would be nice, but I don't think we should override state sovereignty like that. I don't think there's a strong argument that such a law would be constitutionally permissible.
2/22/2013 8:01:24 PM
SBRs and SBSs should be removed from NFA as well
2/22/2013 8:54:47 PM
2/22/2013 8:54:54 PM
letting us have well-regulated militias
2/22/2013 8:56:30 PM
that's the national guard
2/22/2013 9:06:09 PM
nope, anytime you actually try to use it as a state's militia and the fed doesn't agree, POTUS can just call them up for service. happened during the '60s.[Edited on February 22, 2013 at 9:11 PM. Reason : the militia is every able-bodied male over 18. SCOTUS agrees.]
2/22/2013 9:07:57 PM
we were warned about the dangers of standing armies. now, when you say "we need 2A as a check against tyranny" the response always boils down to "but the standing army will kick your ass".
2/22/2013 9:17:27 PM
neusriverrat wants his militia so he can start attacking LEO'sand you wonder why Clinton and H.W. Bush cracked down on them
2/22/2013 9:45:47 PM
alsoevery one of you saying that less gun laws is what we need to reduce gun crime and gun deaths are mouth breathing morons
2/22/2013 9:47:30 PM
That may be true, but there is no gun ban beyond automatic weapons that makes too much sense. The Biden video really points this out. A shotgun and handgun are just as deadly in massacres as a rifle with a pistol grip. It just seems an AWB that focuses on limiting certain features and guns misses the mark. Gun reform should focus more on policing and monitoring the avenues guns get into criminals or madmens hands. It might be a compromise to ditch the AWB in favor of closing loopholes and increasing penalties on failing to secure weapons. If this leads to information being consolidated on where a guns might be, so be it. This should be on the table.
2/22/2013 10:00:24 PM
^ If the AWB is missing the mark, why use it as part of a "compromise" ?by agreeing to cut it, i mean[Edited on February 22, 2013 at 10:20 PM. Reason : |]
2/22/2013 10:19:39 PM
Because politics and gun lobby
2/22/2013 10:51:05 PM
2/22/2013 11:08:54 PM
what if my dad wants to let me borrow his rifle or shotgun to go hunting or go give it a try at the range? what if my buddy wants to try out my new pistol at the range? should we have to go to an FFL, pay a transfer fee, and fill out paperwork before and after?
2/22/2013 11:16:38 PM
No, as long as you trust someone to use the gun in a lawful manner and then return it back to you, there should not be any paperwork (just like you can let someone else use your car without transferring the ownership of it). Now, if you give it to your buddy and he shoots someone with it, obviously the blame will initially fall on you, and then you will have to prove that the gun was not in your possession (just like when someone borrows your car and runs a red light with it)
2/22/2013 11:34:10 PM
but that's exactly why red-light tickets aren't criminal penalties.
2/22/2013 11:52:02 PM
^^^^ there's really not much accountability for licensed dealers too, there are so many restrictions protecting them against audits[Edited on February 22, 2013 at 11:53 PM. Reason : .]
2/22/2013 11:52:46 PM
2/23/2013 2:09:47 AM
While I applaud the sheriff's enthusiasm, I wonder what would the department would if I were to try to open carry in Utah state courthouse, and when they would tell me there are no guns allowed in the courthouse, I'd quote my constitutional right to bear arm and refuse to surrender it. I think SCOTUS has to find a law unconstitutional before you can actually resist it with deadly force without a possibility of getting shot by state LEO or the feds, you can't just say "i find this unconstitutional" and start firing away in self-defense. Constitution is the Supreme Law, and it is lawmakers' job to make all other legislature based on that law, while it is SCOTUS' job to interpret the Constitution and to make sure any new legislation does not violate it. However, if the law is passed, whether state or federal, and it is not found unconstitutional, public must obey the law or challenge it in a legal way, not just grab a gun and barricade themselves in their home swearing to defend it to last drop of blood.Even in Hiro's quote, it is clear that what they are defending is a specific "traditional interpretation" of the constitutionI understand that there may be cases where government grossly oversteps the boundary and at some point groups of citizens or entire states can decide simply not to follow a new law and resist arrest for breaking it, but at that point they have to be ready to lead a revolution and/or a civil war.I often hear this argument that without the Second Amendment rights, other rights given by BOR would cease to exist. I personally read it as the ability of armed citizens to organize militias in case of government tyranny in order to force the government to amend its ways. I think some people read it differently and imagine think that they can defend their individual freedoms by firing upon LEOs, be it federal or state, that they think violate their rights. To provide an analogy, imagine if a few individuals wanted to do some hate speaking, law enforcement would probably try to arrest them because SCOTUS found hate speech not protected by the First Amendment. These people could then declare than they prefer the "traditional interpretation" of the first amendment and fire at the LEOs, claiming that they are protecting their constitutional right. The question is, if there is a law issued by the Congress and not found unconstitutional by the SCOTUS, are they protecting their rights or are they breaking the law? Now what if government found that magazines larger than 10 rounds are not protected by the Second Amendment, and the SCOTUS agreed this law doesn't infringe on peoples right to bear arms. Would people refusing to surrender their magazines be right to fire at the LEOs that would try to enforce this new law?
2/23/2013 11:08:06 AM
^ you seem to equate self defense and what these Sheriffs are doing as a "shoot first" situation. You do know that's not necessarily the case, right? There's nothing that says these Sheriffs are going to shoot a federal agent trying to do their job. You shoot when your life is in imminent danger, not to prevent any old crime. If the Feds shoot first, I'm sure the sheriffs will shoot back. If there is a serious danger of that happening, they may shoot first. They're not going to just walk up and say "You are acting illegally. bang". You've had a few posts now where I get that vibe from you. Maybe it's just your wording but it really seems like you misunderstand self defense and defense of constitutional rights.
2/23/2013 4:31:50 PM
2/23/2013 6:52:26 PM
2/23/2013 6:55:53 PM
^Good point. I guess it will constitute resisting arrest. But what if they break into your house with no warrant, don't you have a right to shoot in self-defense?
2/23/2013 7:29:06 PM
2/24/2013 8:57:01 AM
2/24/2013 12:14:08 PM
I think it's interesting that when you look at countries where crime rates are much higher than in the U.S., you will find that for self defense of home invasion people put the most faith in panic rooms and security systems.
2/24/2013 11:02:01 PM
That might be because gun ownership is more difficult in those countries.
2/24/2013 11:32:04 PM
and also because its a fact that's nearly impossible to prove that was probable just made up
2/24/2013 11:49:42 PM
Not made up
2/25/2013 12:11:32 AM
So its a fact from where or based on what?
2/25/2013 8:29:04 AM
http://thehill.com/blogs/floor-action/house/284679-gop-lawmaker-says-obama-using-fake-people-to-flood-twitter-with-gun-control-messageshaha now the white house is spamming twitter with its bullshit
2/25/2013 7:38:11 PM
How did you trace that to the white house? Is Obama responsible for everything anyone does on his behalf?
2/26/2013 8:43:23 AM
Suck it gun control advocates.
2/26/2013 1:54:41 PM
this is the beginning of a new era
2/26/2013 4:18:32 PM
This will end well...
2/26/2013 4:21:39 PM
Wow, you can buy a $4k 3d printer and make gun parts! That's so much different than how you could have bought a $4k cnc machine and have made gun parts for years now.
2/26/2013 4:41:09 PM
3d printer does cavities and contours that you would need a 5-axis machine for, or that would be impossible on a mill.
2/26/2013 4:43:39 PM
2/26/2013 4:52:25 PM
$4k cnc machine?[Edited on February 26, 2013 at 5:07 PM. Reason : capable of making a lower?]
2/26/2013 5:06:44 PM
2/26/2013 7:10:17 PM
i guess we'll just have to sit back and watch
2/26/2013 8:54:31 PM
the only reason silencers have been thrown into the mix too were poachers not murders.
2/26/2013 8:59:55 PM
price isn't the reason 3D printers are disruptive, they are disruptive because it takes very little skills to make parts that typically would require a skilled machinist or armorer
2/26/2013 9:36:47 PM
^+1Another issue is that apparently 3D printers can be used to print "disposable" guns that are only good for a few shots but use little or no metal parts and can pass through metal detectors (although I am still wondering what would one use for the barrel and the chamber, maybe they are metallic but non-ferrous?) By the way, Defense Distributed does not do any favors to the gun-rights movement IMHO. All that posturing will lead to another set of regulations, this time about what can or cannot be printed.
2/26/2013 11:38:56 PM
^^ they take a program, just like a cnc, they hook up to a computer just like a 3d printer. Dentists and jewelers have been using them for years without machinists, I've used a cnc before, not that hard, it's got a little computer, you find the cad file, load it up, put in material and start it up. But regardless, before that you had lathes, before that you could smith your own, you could make your own gun since guns have existed. I don't know what you're trying to prove with this.
2/27/2013 12:27:16 AM
expensive CNCs are easy and calculate the tooling directions on their own... cheap ones don't calculate tooling directions from cad and need to be programed and it takes someone who knows what they are doing to complete the programming.
2/27/2013 7:48:56 AM
a 3D printer is much more capable than a CNC, even an expensive 5-axis CNC because it can print all of the internal voids that you would need to cast or assemble. its not a good comparison, its a much different technology.to explain it in another way, try to make a hollow ball on a CNC
2/27/2013 9:18:28 AM
http://reason.com/blog/2013/02/27/gun-control-laws-increasingly-irrelevantAhem. This seems relevant. Link includes the video that destroyer posted as well as some other stuff you might want to read.If anyone here has ever read The Diamond Age the advent of 3D printers is somewhat reminiscent of the seed. The ability to basically make anything you can imagine at home with little more than a computer, internet access, and a 3D printer is an absolute game changer.[Edited on February 27, 2013 at 11:19 AM. Reason : sdfasdf]
2/27/2013 11:17:38 AM
just another isolated incident, but why did someone who was known to have mental problems knowlingly own a gun?http://www.wral.com/cops-grandma-shot-self-young-grandsons-in-car/12158226/
2/27/2013 12:21:52 PM
^if she didnt have access to a gun she could have easily driven the car into deep water
2/27/2013 12:45:54 PM